Seven pointers that are fairly easy is gaining credibility in assisting the treatment of elderly patients who have suffered heart failure.
Seven pointers that are fairly easy is gaining credibility in assisting the treatment of elderly patients who have suffered heart failure. Researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have suggested that by simply counting the number of health factors to a patient's advantage, the physician can use this barometer to assess the patient's risk of death.
The points system may steer doctors toward considering more aggressive treatments such as implantable defibrillators and pacemakers for those at low risk of death. However, elderly patients with a high risk may want to avoid stressful and unnecessary medical intervention and may benefit most from palliative or hospice care.'It has typically been very difficult to predict how long a person hospitalized with heart failure may survive,' says senior author Michael W. Rich, M.D., associate professor of medicine and a geriatric cardiologist at Barnes-Jewish Hospital. 'That has made it hard for the treating physician to know how aggressive to be with therapy.'
Heart failure afflicts about 5 million people in the United States, hospitalizing more than a million patients each year. The incidence of heart failure increases with age, and with people 65 and older becoming the fastest growing segment of the population, the personal and financial burden of heart failure will likely increase.
In their study, which followed 282 elderly heart failure patients for up to 14 years, the researchers identified seven factors that most affect patient survival:
The study, published in the September 25th issue of the Archives of Internal Medicine, showed that patients with four or more of the risk factors had a low probability of surviving longer than six months. But if patients had none or just one of the factors, they had a good chance of living five years or more. Patients with two to three factors were likely to live at least a year. The patients in the study received a variety of treatments as determined by their physicians.
'The system is easy to use, and the variables don't require any specialized testing — they are part of routine medical histories or basic lab tests,' Rich says. 'If the system can be validated by further studies, it can play a role in helping physicians tailor care to individual patients. If a person has a limited life expectancy, it may not be in his or her best interest to recommend invasive, uncomfortable or risky procedures. On the other hand, an elderly person with only one risk factor could potentially be considered a good candidate for an aggressive treatment such as a defibrillator.'
Advertisement
'We didn't find any new risk factors, which means there's good data to support that these factors truly are predictive,' Rich says. 'We've pinpointed the seven that are the most predictive and shown that the number of risk factors can give a reasonable estimate of the probability of living for six, 12 or 60 months.'
Advertisement
'Hospice is very nurturing for both patients and family members,' Rich says. 'There is considerable evidence that patients derive significant benefit from it. If we can predict mortality within six months, we can more easily establish eligibility for hospice care.'
Source-Eurekalert
SAV